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Jay Mallonee is a research biologist with a master’s degree in neurobiology/animal behavior. Through

his business of Wolf & Wildlife Studies, he has researched wolves in various states since 1992, along

with a 9-year study of the Fishtrap pack in northwest Montana (Project HOWL). Previous research has

included the documentation of traumatic stress displayed by a wild wolf placed into captivity, and

behavioral studies on rodents, primates, and a variety of cetaceans, such as gray whales and bottlenose

dolphins. Details of his studies can be found at

http://www.wolfandwildlifestudies.com. He also authored the book

Timber – A Perfect Life, that chronicles the profound 16 year journey with his canine companion.

Mallonee is a college professor and has taught a wide range of science classes for Michigan Tech

University, U. C. Santa Barbara, San Francisco State University, and several community colleges.  Below is a revealing article about how no sufficient data supports the wolf hunts!  Click on the link at the bottom to read the rest of his article and special thanks to the multiple sources he uses:

 

“Abstract

Management agencies have claimed that the recovery and public hunting of wolves is based in science.

A review of their statistics demonstrated that data collection methods did not follow a scientific protocol

which resulted in flawed and often blatantly incorrect data. Consequently, agencies do not know the

total number of wolves in Montana, a major reference point used by wolf managers. Therefore, the

quotas proposed for public wolf hunts are completely arbitrary, and management decisions in general

have not been based on facts. Management methods, and now hunting, contribute to the current

ecological crisis produced by the elimination and manipulation of predator species, which form the top

of food chains. These consumers produce a powerful “top-down” influence throughout ecosystems

which can even determine the surrounding vegetation species. Also reviewed were public attitudes

toward wolves, along with political approaches to solving the “wolf problem.” The total effect of these

processes has produced a wolf management system that lacks scientific perspective and does not utilize

what is known about the wolves’ role in sustaining healthy ecosystems. Instead, the data demonstrates

that management decisions have been based on agenda and propelled by opinion, bigotry, and politic.”  He adds, ”

Ultimately we have the greatest influence on how many deer, elk, wolves, and other predators are

present in our ecosystems. Until the current management paradigm changes, along with public attitude,

there is no permanent solution to the apparent “wolf problem.”

I can appreciate how hard FWP works to

obtain data on wolves and I know they do their best. Their best, however, is not science as they have

claimed.

Future solutions will have to take into account the full range of what science knows about

wolves. Until that happens, agendas, opinions, and politics will guide wolf management over problems

that are either mostly unknown (effects on prey populations) or rarely happen (depredations). This is a

social issue, not a biological one.”

http://www.wolfandwildlifestudies.com/downloads/huntingwolvesinmontana.pdf


“The resumption of wolf-hunts in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming illustrates why citizens must continue to oppose such unnecessary and senseless slaughters.

The wolf-hunts are predicated upon morally corrupt and inaccurate assumptions about wolf behavior and impacts that are not supported by recent scientific research.  State wildlife agencies pander to the lowest common denominator in the hunting community—men who need to bolster their own self esteem and release misdirected anger by killing.

Wolf-hunts, as Montana Fish and Game Commission Chairman Bob Ream noted at a public hearing, are in part to relieve hunters’ frustrations—frustration based on inaccurate information, flawed assumptions, and just plain old myths and fears about predators and their role in the world.

Maybe relieving hunter frustration is a good enough justification for wolf-hunts to many people. However, in my view permitting hunts to go forward without even registering opposition is to acquiesce to ignorance, hatred, and the worst in human motivations. Thankfully a few environmental groups, most notably the Center for Biodiversity, Wildearth Guardians, Friends of the Clearwater, Alliance for Wild Rockies and Western Watersheds had the courage and gumption to stand up to ignorance and hatred.

All of the usual justifications given for wolf-hunts are spurious at best.  For instance, one rationale given for hunting wolves is to reduce their presumed effects on big game populations. Yet in all three states, elk and deer populations are at or exceed population objectives for most hunting units.

For instance in Wyoming, one of the most vehement anti wolf states in the West, the 2010 elk population was 21,200 animals over state-wide objectives, and this did not include data for six herds, suggesting that elk populations are likely higher. Of the state’s elk herds most were at or above objectives and only 6 percent were below objectives. Similar data are found for Idaho and Montana elk herds as well.

However, you would not know that from the “howls” of hunters who characterize the elk populations as suffering from a wolf induced Armageddon.  And Fish and Game departments are loath to counter the false accusations from hunters that wolves are somehow “destroying” hunting throughout the Rockies.

Experience in other parts of the country where wolves have been part of the landscape longer suggests that in the long term, wolves – while they may reduce prey populations in certain locales – generally do not reduce hunting opportunities across a state or region.  Despite the fact that there more than double the number of wolves in Minnesota (3000+) as in the entire Rocky Mountain region, Minnesota hunters experienced the highest deer kills ever in recent years, with Minnesota deer hunters killing over 250,000 white-tailed deer during each of those hunting seasons – an approximate five-fold increase in hunter deer take since wolves were listed under the ESA in 1978.

Another claim made by wolf-hunt proponents is that hunting will reduce “conflicts” with livestock owners. Again this assertion is taken as a matter of faith without really looking into the veracity of it. Given the hysteria generated by the livestock industry one might think that the entire western livestock operations were in jeopardy from wolf predation.  However, the number of livestock killed annually by wolves is pitifully small, especially by comparison to losses from other more mundane sources like poison plants, lightning and even domestic dogs.

For instance, the FWS reported that 75 cattle and 148 sheep were killed in Idaho during 2010. In Montana the same year 84cattle and 64 sheep were verified as killed by wolves. While any loss may represent a significant financial blow to individual ranchers, the livestock industry as a whole is hardly threatened by wolf predation. And it hardly warrants the exaggerated psychotic response by Congress, state legislators and state wildlife agencies.

In light of the fact that most losses are avoidable by implementation of simple measures of that reduce predator opportunity, persecution of predators like wolves is even more morally suspect. Rapid removal of dead carcasses from rangelands, corralling animals at night, electric fencing, and the use of herders, among other measures, are proven to significantly reduce predator losses—up to 90% in some studies. This suggests that ranchers have the capacity (if not the willingness) to basically make wolf losses a non-issue.

However, since ranchers have traditionally been successful in externalizing many of their costs on to the land and taxpayers, including what should be their responsibility to reduce predator conflicts, I do not expect to see these kinds of measures enacted by the livestock industry any time soon, if ever. Ranchers are so used to being coddled they have no motivation or incentives to change their practices in order to reduce predator losses. Why should they change animal husbandry practices when they can get the big bad government that they like to despise and disparage to come in and kill predators for them for free and even get environmental groups like Defenders of Wildlife to support paying for predator losses that are entirely avoidable?

But beyond those figures, wolf-hunting ignores a growing body of research that suggests that indiscriminate killing—which hunting is—actually exacerbates livestock/predator conflicts. The mantra of pro wolf-hunting community is that wolves should be “managed” like “other” wildlife. This ignores the findings that suggest that predators are not like other wildlife. They are behaviorally different from say elk and deer. Random killing of predators including bears, mountain lions and wolves creates social chaos that destabilizes predator social structure. Hunting of wolves can skew wolf populations towards younger animals. Younger animals are less skillful hunters. As a consequence, they will be more inclined to kill livestock. Destabilized and small wolf packs also have more difficulty in holding territories and even defending their kills from scavengers and other predators which in end means they are more likely to kill new prey animal.

As a result of these behavioral consequences, persecution of predators through hunting has a self fulfilling feedback mechanism whereby hunters kill more predators, which in turn leads to greater social chaos, and more livestock kills, and results in more demands for hunting as the presumed solution.

Today predator management by so called “professional” wildlife agencies is much more like the old time medical profession where sick people were bled.  If they didn’t get better immediately, more blood was let. Finally if the patient died, it was because not enough blood was released from the body. The same illogical reasoning dominates predator management across the country. If killing predators doesn’t cause livestock losses to go down and/or game herds to rise, it must be because we haven’t killed enough predators yet.

Furthermore, most hunting  occurs on larger blocks of public lands and most wolves as well as other predators killed by hunters have no relationship to the animals that may be killing livestock  on private ranches or taking someone’s pet poodle from the back yard. A number of studies of various predators from cougars to bears show no relationship between hunter kills and a significant reduction in the actual animals considered to be problematic.

Again I hasten to add that most “problematic predators” are created a result of problem behavior by humans—for instance leaving animal carcasses out on the range or failure to keep garbage from bears, etc. and humans are supposed to be the more intelligent species—though if one were to observe predator management across the country it would be easy to doubt such presumptions.

Finally, wolf-hunting ignores yet another recent and growing body of scientific evidence that suggests that top predators have many top down ecological influences upon the landscape and other wildlife. The presence of wolves, for instance, can reduce deer and elk numbers in some places for some time period. But rather than viewing this as a negative as most hunters presume, reduction of prey species like elk can have many positive ecological influences. A reduction of elk herbivory on riparian vegetation can produce more song bird habitat. Wolves can reduce coyote predation on snowshoe hare thus competition for food by lynx, perhaps increasing survival for this endangered species. Wolves have been shown to increase the presence of voles and mice near their dens—a boon for some birds of prey like hawks. These and many other positive effects on the environment are ignored by wolf-hunt proponents and unfortunately by state wildlife management agencies as well who continue to advocate and/or at least not effectively counter old fallacies about predators.

Most state agencies operate under the assumption that production of elk and deer for hunters to shoot should have priority in wildlife management decisions. All state wildlife agencies are by law supposed to manage wildlife as a public trust for all citizens.  Yet few challenge the common assumption that elk and deer exist merely for the pleasure of hunters to shoot.

I have no doubt that for many pro wolf-hunt supporters’ predators represent all that is wrong with the world. Declining job prospects, declining economic vitality of their rural communities, changes in social structures and challenges to long-held beliefs are exemplified by the wolf. Killing wolves is symbolic of destroying all those other things that are bad in the world for which they have no control. They vent this misdirected anger on wolves– that gives them the illusion that they can control something.

Nevertheless, making wolves and other predators scapegoats for the personal failures of individuals or the collective failures of society is not fair to wolves or individuals either.  The premises upon which western wolf-hunts are based either are the result of inaccurate assumptions about wolf impacts or morally corrupt justifications like relieving hunter anger and frustrations over how their worlds are falling apart.

I applaud the few environmental groups that had the courage to stand up for wolves, and to challenge the old guard that currently controls our collective wildlife heritage.  More of us need to stand up against persecution of wildlife to appease the frustrations of disenfranchised rural residents. It is time to have wildlife management based on science, and ecological integrity, not based upon relieving hunter frustrations over the disintegrating state of their world. And lastly we need a new ethnics and relationship to wildlife that goes beyond a simple utilitarian view of whether any particular species benefits or harms human in real and/or imaginary ways.”

**Special thanks to George Wuerthner, ecologist and former hunting guide with a degree in wildlife biology, for providing this information!


“HELENA, Mont. (AP) — A federal appeals court on Thursday denied a request by environmental groups to halt wolf hunts that are scheduled to begin next week in Idaho and Montana.

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals denied the request by the Alliance for the Wild Rockies and other groups. The groups were seeking to cancel the hunts while the court considers a challenge to congressional action in April that stripped wolves of federal protections in Montana and Idaho, and in parts of Washington, Oregon and Utah.

Earlier this month, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Missoula reluctantly upheld a budget rider that was inserted by Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, and Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont. It marked the first time since the passage of the Endangered Species Act in 1973 that Congress forcibly removed protections from a plant or animal.

Molloy ruled that the way Congress went about removing endangered species protections from the Northern Rockies gray wolf undermined the rule of law but did not violate the Constitution. Meanwhile, the environmental groups argued Congress’ actions were unconstitutional because they violated the principle of separation of powers.

“We lost the injunction, we have not lost the case,” Mike Garrity, executive director of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies, said of Thursday’s court ruling. “We will continue to fight to protect the wolves and enforce the separation of powers doctrine in the U.S. Constitution.”

Meanwhile, John Horning, executive director for WildEarth Guardians, one of the groups involved in the case, said, “We are discouraged we didn’t win a stay of execution for wolves, but we are cautiously optimistic that we will win our lawsuit to protect wolves from future persecution.”

Wolf hunts are scheduled to begin Aug. 30 in Idaho and Sept. 3 in Montana. Hunters in Montana will be allowed to shoot as many as 220 gray wolves, reducing the predators’ Montana population by about 25 percent to a minimum of 425 wolves.

In Idaho, where an estimated 1,000 wolves roam, state wildlife managers have declined to name a target for kills for the seven-month hunting season. They say the state will manage wolves so their population remains above 150 animals and 15 breeding pairs, the point where Idaho could attract federal scrutiny for a possible re-listing under the Endangered Species Act.”

*Special thanks to “San Antonio’s Home Page” for providing this information.

 


  • In order for a new wolf cub to urinate, its mother has to massage its belly with her warm tongue.e
  • The Vikings wore wolf skins and drank wolf blood to take on the wolf’s spirit in battle. They also viewed real wolves as battle companions or hrægifr (corpse trolls).f
  • The earliest drawings of wolves are in caves in southern Europe and date from 20,000 B.C.b
  • Wolves do not make good guard dogs because they are naturally afraid of the unfamiliar and will hide from visitors rather than bark at them.g
  • The autoimmune disease Systemic Lupus Erythmatosus (SLE), or lupus, literally means wolf redness, because in the eighteenth century, physicians believed the disease was caused by a wolf bite.f
  • Wolves are the largest members of the Canidae family, which includes domestic dogs, coyotes, dingoes, African hunting dogs, many types of foxes, and several kinds of jackals.a
  • Wolves run on their toes, which helps them to stop and turn quickly and to prevent their paw pads from wearing down.e
  • Wolves have about 200 million scent cells. Humans have only about 5 million. Wolves can smell other animals more than one mile (1.6 kilometers) away.b
  • A wolf pup’s eyes are blue at birth. Their eyes turn yellow by the time they are eight months old.
    • A male and female that mate usually stay together for life. They are devoted parents and maintain sophisticated family ties.c
    • Wolf gestation is around 65 days. Wolf pups are born both deaf and blind and weigh only one pound.d
    • Under certain conditions, wolves can hear as far as six miles away in the forest and ten miles on the open tundra.a
    • Wolves were once the most widely distributed land predator the world has ever seen. The only places they didn’t thrive were in the true desert and rainforests.e
    • Among true wolves, two species are recognized: Canis lupus (often known simply as “gray wolves”), which includes 38 subspecies, such as the gray, timber, artic, tundra, lobos, and buffalo wolves. The other recognized species is the red wolf (Canis rufus), which are smaller and have longer legs and shorter fur than their relatives. Many scientists debate whether Canis rufus is a separate species.e
    • Immense power is concentrated in a wolf’s jaw. It has a crushing pressure of nearly 1,500 pound per square inch (compared with around 750 for a large dog). The jaws themselves are massive, bearing 42 teeth specialized for stabbing, shearing, and crunching bones. Their jaws also open farther than those of a dog.g
    • The North American gray wolf population in 1600 was 2 million. Today the population in North America is approximately 65,000. The world population is approximately 150,000.b
    • A hungry wolf can eat 20 pounds of meat in a single meal, which is akin to a human eating one hundred hamburgers.b
    • A wolf pack may contain just two or three animals, or it may be 10 times as large.e
    • Though many females in a pack are able to have pups, only a few will actually mate and bear pups. Often, only the alpha female and male will mate, which serves to produce the strongest cubs and helps limit the number of cubs the pack must care for. The other females will help raise and “babysit” the cubs.a
    • Lower-ranking males do not mate and often suffer from a condition of stress and inhibition that has been referred to as “psychological castration.” Lower-ranking females are sometimes so afraid of the alpha female that they do not even go into heat.d
    • An average size wolf produces roughly 1.2 cubic inches of sperm.b
    • Wolves evolved from an ancient animal called Mesocyon, which lived approximately 35 million years ago. It was a small dog-like creature with short legs and a long body. Like the wolf, it may have lived in packs.g
    • Wolves can swim distances of up to 8 miles (13 kilometers) aided by small webs between their toes.b
    • Between 1883 and 1918, more than 80,00 wolves were killed in Montana for bounty.d
    • Adolph Hitler (whose first name means “lead wolf”) was fascinated by wolves and sometimes used “Herr Wolf” or “Conductor Wolf” as an alias. “Wolf’s Gulch” (Wolfsschlucht), “Wolf’s Lair” (Wolfschanze), and “Werewolf” (Wehrwolf) were Hitler’s code names for various military headquarters.f
    • In the 1600s, Ireland was called “Wolf-land” because it had so many wolves. Wolf hunting was a popular sport among the nobility, who used the Irish wolfhound to outrun and kill wolves. The earliest record of an Irish wolfhound dates from Roman times in A.D. 391.f
    • Recent scientists suggest that labeling a wolf “alpha” or “omega” is misleading because “alpha” wolves are simply parent wolves. Using “alpha” terminology falsely suggests a rigidly forced permanent social structure.c
    human howling
    Although wolves are usually afraid of humans, they will respond to human howls
    • Biologists have found that wolves will respond to humans imitating their howls. The International Wolf Center in Minnesota even sponsors “howl nights” on which people can howl in the wilderness and hope for an answering howl.b
    • Wolves have historically been associated with sexual predation. For example, Little Red Riding Hood, who wears a red cape that proclaims her sexual maturity, is seduced off the moral path by a wolf. The sex link endures in common clichés, such as describing a predatory man as “a wolf” or a sexy whistle as a “wolf whistle.”f
    • Biologists describe wolf territory as not just spatial, but spatial-temporal, so that each pack moves in and out of each other’s turf depending on how recently the “no trespassing” signals were posted.d
    • The Greek god Apollo is sometimes called Apollo Lykios, the wolf-Apollo, and was associated with the wind and sun. In Athens, the land surrounding the temple of Apollo became known as the Lyceum, or the “wolf skin.”f
    • In 1927, a French policeman was tried for the shooting of a boy he believed was a werewolf. That same year, the last wild wolves in France were killed.f
    • When Europeans arrived in North America, wolves became the most widely hunted animal in American history and were nearly extinct by the beginning of the twentieth century. The U.S. Federal government even enacted a wolf eradication program in the Western states in 1915.a
    • Dire wolves (canis dirus) were prehistoric wolves that lived in North America about two million years ago. Now extinct, they hunted prey as large as woolly mammoths.e
    • A wolf can run about 20 miles (32 km) per hour, and up to 40 miles (56 km) per hour when necessary, but only for a minute or two. They can “dog trot” around 5 miles (8km) per hour and can travel all day at this speed.g
    • The smallest wolves live in the Middle East, where they may weigh only 30 pounds. The largest wolves inhabit Canada, Alaska, and the Soviet Union, where they can reach 175 pounds.e
    • Wolves howl to contact separated members of their group, to rally the group before hunting, or to warn rival wolf packs to keep away. Lone wolves will howl to attract mates or just because they are alone. Each wolf howls for only about five seconds, but howls can seem much longer when the entire pack joins in.c
    • A light-reflecting layer on a wolf’s eye called the tapetum lucidum (Latin for “bright tapestry”) causes a wolf’s eyes to glow in the dark and may also facilitate night vision. While a wolf’s color perception and visual acuity maybe be inferior to a human’s, a wolf’s eyes are extremely sensitive to movement.d
    wolves ravens
    Ravens, or “wolf-birds,” seem to form social attachments with wolves
    • Where there are wolves, there are often ravens (sometimes known as “wolf-birds”). Ravens often follow wolves to grab leftovers from the hunt—and to tease the wolves. They play with the wolves by diving at them and then speeding away or pecking their tails to try to get the wolves to chase them.g
    • In ancient Rome, barren women attended the Roman festival Lupercalia (named for the legendary nursery cave of Romulus and Remus) in the hopes of becoming fertile.f
    • According to Pliny the Elder, a first-century Greek scholar, wolf teeth could be rubbed on the gums of infants to ease the pain of teething. He also reported that wolf dung could be used to treat both colic and cataracts.f
    • The Aztecs used wolf liver as an ingredient for treating melancholy. They also pricked a patient’s breast with a sharpened wolf bone in an attempt to delay death.f
    • During the Middle Ages, Europeans used powdered wolf liver to ease the pain of childbirth and would tie a wolf’s right front paw around a sore throat to reduce the swelling. Dried wolf meat was also eaten as a remedy for sore shins.f
    • The Greeks believed that if someone ate meat from a wolf-killed lamb, he or she ran a high risk of becoming a vampire.f
    • During the reign of Edward the Confessor, which began in 1042, a condemned criminal was forced to wear a wolf-head mask and could be executed on a “wolf’s head tree” or the gallows where a wolf might be hanged next to him.f
    • Werewolf (wer “man” + wulf “wolf”) trials (which can be distinguished from witchcraft trials) led to hundreds of executions during the 1600s. Men, women, and children—many of whom were physically and mentally handicapped—were put to death.f
    • The Cherokee Indians did not hunt wolves because they believed a slain wolves’ brothers would exact revenge. Furthermore, if a weapon were used to kill a wolf, the weapon would not work correctly again.f
    • In approximately the year 800, Charlemagne founded a special wolf-hunting force, the Louveterie, which remained active until 1789. It was reactivated in1814, and the last French wolf was killed in 1927.a
    • Britain’s King Edgar imposed an annual tax of 300 wolf skins on Wales. The Welsh wolf population was quickly exterminated.a
    • In 1500, the last wolf was killed in England. In 1770, Ireland’s last wolf was killed. In 1772, Denmark’s last wolf was killed.a
    • After hearing of “frightening spirits” in the woods with human features that walked on four legs, Reverend Singh in 1920 discovered a den with two cubs and two human girls, one around age 7 or 8, the other around 2. After being brought back to “civilization,” the younger one died within a year. Recently, authors have questioned the validity of this story as modern knowledge has revealed that wolf-like behavior is often seen in autistic or abused children.d
    • Sextus Placitus, in his fifth-century B.C. Medicina de quadrupedibus (Medicinals from Animals), claims that sleeping with a wolf’s head under one’s pillow would cure insomnia.f
    • In 1934, Germany became the first nation in modern times to place the wolf under protection. Influenced by Friedrich Nietzsche’s (1844-1900) and Oswald Spengler’s (1880-1936) belief that natural predators possessed more vigor and virility than their prey, the protection was probably more for an “iconic” wolf than the actual wolf, particularly since the last wolves in Germany were killed in the middle of the nineteenth century.f
    facial expression
    Wolves are one of the few animals that communicate using a great range of facial expressions
    • Unlike other animals, wolves have a variety of distinctive facial expressions they use to communicate and maintain pack unity.c
    • The Japanese word for wolf means “great god.”f
    • Between 6,000 and 7,000 wolf skins are still traded across the world each year. The skins are supplied mainly by Russia, Mongolia, and China and are used mainly for coats.a
    • In India, simple wolf traps are still used. These traps consist of a simple pit, disguised with branches or leaves. The wolves fall in and people then stone them to death.a
    • Wolves were the first animals to be placed on the U.S. Endangered Species Act list in 1973.a
    • John Milton’s famous poem “Lycidas” derives its title from the Greek for “wolf cub,” lykideus.f
    • In the Harry Potter universe, werewolf Remus Lupin’s name is directly related to the Latin word for wolf (lupus) and suggests an association with one of the founders of Rome, Remus, who was suckled by a wolf. The dual nature of Lupin’s werewolf nature suggests that in the Potter realm, there are two sides to everything.f
    • The last wolf in Yellowstone Park was killed in 1926. In 1995, wolves were reintroduced and, after just ten years, approximately 136 wolves now roam the Park in about 13 wolf packs.b
    • Currently, there are about 50,000 wolves in Canada; 6,500 in Alaska; and 3,500 in the Lower 48 States. In Europe, Italy has fewer than 300; Spain around 2,000; and Norway and Sweden combined have fewer than 80. There are about 700 wolves in Poland and 70,000 in Russia.b*

*Special thanks to “Random Facts” (http://facts.randomhistory.com/interesting-facts-about-wolves.html) for providing this information!

 


WOLF PRESERVATION IS OUTRAGED!  

Wolves have been stripped of their legal protections. 

Hunters are locked and loaded.   Traps are set.

Montana, Idaho, Wyoming among states looking to eradicate wolves.

This is not “responsible management” as Idaho Governor “Butch” Otter stated if he plans on wiping out more than 80% of the population.  Wolves have NO protection anymore.    It’s shoot on sight and animals are allowed to sit in painful traps for x72 hours!   Here’s what you need to do:  1. Express outrage toward each state governor and explain you are boycotting their state until they stop this madness (http://gov.idaho.gov/ourgov/contact.html, http://governor.mt.gov/cabinet/contactus.asp, http://governor.wy.gov/contactUs/Pages/default.aspx).  Spread this information to others and have them write to each governor.  Call your local newstation, newspaper, and pull together others for a wolf rally with signs (save wolves, boycott Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming, ect.). 

**Also, please watch the video through the link below and then visit “Friends of Animals” as they are fighting hard in court and through news stations to overturn extinction efforts.  We cannot save all these beloved wolves but we need to act now to save future packs from the same fate! 

Priscilla Feral, president of Friends of Animals: “Removing federal protection and subjecting wolves to more hunting is unconstitutional and unconscionable.”

http://www.cnn.com/video/?/video/us/2011/08/12/jvm.wolves.endangered.list.hln

http://www.friendsofanimals.org/news/2011/august/howling-across-ameri.html


“LA GRANDE, Ore. — Two young wolves from the Imnaha pack have struck out for new territory, and the pack’s alpha female gave birth to at least one pup this year, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said Monday.

No pups have been spotted in the Wenaha pack.

“Wolf packs are dynamic and rarely stay the same size over time,” noted Russ Morgan, ODFW wolf coordinator. “A pack can be healthy despite these natural fluctuations in numbers, as long as a breeding pair of wolves, the alpha male and female, is maintained.” 

Wolf pups are born in mid-April, with litters typically averaging four to six pups. The pups go outside the den and become more active beginning in June.

A state employee spotted the Imnaha pup July 16. No other pups have been seen this year, but wildlife managers said there could be more pups.

Biologists have also confirmed that two more young wolfs left the pack and moved to new areas.

A three-year-old male wearing a radio-tracking collar was located by biologists southeast of Fossil in Wheeler County at the end of July.

ODFW searched the area after a member of the public captured the image of a wolf on his trail camera in the west Blue Mountains. That particular had last been located north of Wallowa on May 10 in Wallowa County.

A second collared wolf, two-year-old male, swam across the Brownlee Reservoir on the Snake River into Idaho on July 18.

This brings to three the number of wolves known to have dispersed from the Imnaha pack. A female wolf went to Washington State last winter when she was 1 1/2 years old.

ODFW does not have evidence that any of these three collared wolves (OR-3, OR-5, OR-9) have joined a new wolf pack yet.

Other uncollared members of the Imnaha pack may have dispersed with the radio-collared wolves or gone their own way, wildlife managers said. The latest observations and data suggest the Imnaha pack now has four adult wolves (three of them with tracking collars), plus the new pup.

Trail cameras have captured images of four adult wolves from Oregon’s other established wolf population, the Wenaha pack, in the northern Blue Mountains area this summer. No pups were seen on the footage.

State biologists plan to monitor the pack for pups and to try and collar members from this pack.”

*Special thanks to KVAL News for providing this information!


“HELENA- Licenses for this year’s Montana wolf hunt are going up on sale on Monday, August 8th and they will be valid within 14 specifically defined wolf management units. It should be noted that hunters must obtain permission to hunt on private lands.

Hunters can purchase a wolf license online or from any FWP regional office or license provider. Hunters must have, or also purchase, a 2011 conservation license in order to take part in the upcoming wold hunt.

Wolf hunting licenses cost $19 for residents and $350 for nonresidents (If wolf opponents want outsiders to stay out of their business, then why do they offer outsiders an opportunity to hunt Montana Wolves?) The hunting season will close in a specific WMU when the quota is reached and Montana Fish Wildlife & Parks reports that if a WMU’s quota isn’t met, the wolf-hunting season will be extended in that area through December 31st. 

Hunters cannot use any motorized vehicle-including OHVs and snowmobiles-to hunt wolves and the use of dogs, bait, sent, lures, traps, lights, electronic tracking devices or any recorded or electrically amplified bird or animal calls to hunt or attract wolves is prohibited.

The total harvest quota is 220 wolves across 14 WMUs Two management units-WMUs 290 and 390 have subquotas. Montana is divided into 14 WMU and each has its own quota. FWP wildlife management areas are open to hunting during the fall wolf season and legally accessible State School Trust Land is also open to wolf hunting.

FWP advises that hunters by law must obtain permission to hunt private land and only tribal members may be allowed to hunt wolves on Indian Reservations. State Game Preserves, National Parks, and National Wildlife Refuges are closed to wolf hunting.

Hunters are required to call     1.877.FWP.WILD   (1.877.397.9453) to report harvests within 12 hours and to maintain possession of the hide and skull, hunters must by law personally present the tagged wolf hide and skull to a designated FWP employee within 10 days of the harvest for inspection. Evidence of the animal’s sex must remain naturally attached to the hide.

Hunters can call 1-800-385-7826  beginning September 3rd for the latest wolf-harvest status and closure information. Wolf hunting regulations are available via the FWP website at , and from most FWP license providers.”

*Information provided by:  KPAX/KAJ Media Center, 08/05/2011.


Finally!  Finally, a bit of positive news for wolves, a bill that doesn’t just compensate ANY livestock owner for a confirmed wolf predation but to those who are implementing non-lethal methods as deterents.   See the story below and share your comments!

Wednesday, August 3rd, 2011:

 John Kitzhaber, Oregon Governor,  signed the state wolf compensation bill Tuesday. It creates a $100,000 fund to pay ranchers who lose livestock to the legally protected wolves.

Aaron Kunz has reaction from those who could benefit from the newly established fund.

The Livestock Compensation and Wolf Co-Existence bill goes into effect right away with Kitzhaber’s signature. The funds will be given to eligible ranchers that lose livestock confirmed predated by wolves.

Eligible ranchers are those who utilize non-lethal methods to deter wolf attacks.

The group is hailing this new law as a demonstration of the state’s commitment to reducing conflicts between wolves and ranchers. 

Suzanne Stone is the conservation group’s northern Rockies representative. She says, “We are really very pleased with the signing of the bill. We worked very hard to get that legislation passed this year and felt it was a very solid compromise that brought both the ranching interests as well as the wildlife interests together.”

Ranchers in Eastern Oregon’s Wallowa County are among those who could benefit from this fund. Cattle rancher Ramona Phillips says it’s a good first step.

*More information can be found in Oregon’s Daily Astorian.


To further express my lifelong advocacy and support for the preservation of wolves, here is my first tattoo, the howling wolf!  Fantastic artwork created by “Angels and Demons Tattoo,” Art Without the Attitude (http://angelsanddemonstattoo.ning.com/) so go check them out!  As always, Wolf Preservation wants to hear what you think! 
 

“SALMON, Idaho, July 28 (Reuters) – Idaho will open its wolf
population, now estimated at about 1,000 animals, to extensive hunting and trapping to reduce their numbers to no fewer than
150 under a plan approved on Thursday by the state Fish and
Game Commission.

The move came after a heated public hearing Wednesday night
in Salmon, where wolf foes declared war on the iconic predators
with rhetoric describing Idaho as locked in a “wolf crisis” and
as one of three “wolf-occupied states” in the Northern Rockies,
along with Montana and Wyoming.

Wolves have been at the center of a bitter debate since
they were reintroduced to the region in the mid-1990s over the
objections of ranchers and commercial outfitters who said
wolves would prey on cattle and compete with hunters for elk.

The plan to cut the wolf population in Idaho comes just
three months after wolves in Idaho and Montana were stripped of
federal protections under the Endangered Species Act through an
unprecedented act of Congress.

Removal from the U.S. endangered species list turned
control of those wolves over to state wildlife agencies, now
free to set hunting seasons as a way of reducing wolf numbers
to levels they see as better balanced with human interests.

In Montana, wildlife managers earlier this month set a
statewide quota of 220 wolves — out of an estimated population
of 566 — for its wolf hunts, which will generally run from
September to November.

Idaho’s commissioners, by comparison, approved a plan that
sets no quota for a combination of hunting and trapping that
will be allowed for most of the year in most of the state,
beginning next month.

However, Idaho would bar wolf numbers statewide from
falling in any given year below the 150 minimum necessary to
prevent federal re-listing of them.

The action in Idaho comes as a federal judge in Montana is
poised to rule on a lawsuit by environmental groups challenging
the de-listing of wolves in both states earlier this year.

DUELING NUMBERS

The commissioners said their aim is to lower the number of
conflicts between wolves and livestock in the state and to end
wolf-caused declines of elk in some parts of Idaho where
outfitters have complained they are losing clients because of
unsuccessful hunts for elk and other big game.

Still, a recent survey by state wildlife managers shows elk
populations exceed or meet biologists’ objectives in the vast
majority of Idaho’s hunting areas. Another study by wildlife
managers shows Idaho wolves killed 148 cows in 2010, out of a
total 2.2 million head of cattle in the state.

Idaho game commissioners characterized their plan as a good
starting point, with future plans to include wolf trapping and
killing by designated state agents and by landowners.

“We will increase the tools in the toolbox and use all
legal mechanisms to solve the problem,” commission chairman
Tony McDermott told wolf opponents on Wednesday night. “We’re
on the same page and we’ll get it done.”

At the meeting Thursday in Salmon, commissioners also cut
the price of non-resident wolf hunting tags statewide from
about $186 to $31.75 as an incentive to out-of-state hunters.

Wildlife advocates on Thursday vowed to launch a boycott of
Idaho, its potatoes and its outfitters.

“The word is getting out that this is basically a wolf-hate
state,” Idaho wolf activist Lynne Stone said. “I think this is
going to be a big hit to the image of Idaho and further hurt
our economy.”

(Editing by Steve Gorman and Peter Bohan)

**Thanks to Laura Zuckerman, Reuters, for providing this information!